Classic
Shell
Do you
miss the Start menu on Windows 8 i know i did until i discovered this great
program, try Classic Shell before spending a money on commercial alternatives.
You'll probably want to stick with it.
Windows 8 doesn't have a Start
button. If you don't think that's something that needs fixing, you're probably
in the minority, at least for now. Maybe in time, Windows 8's Modern-style Start
Screen will grow on users and it'll turn out Microsoft was right all along.
Until that happens, there's a flourishing niche of aftermarket utilities that
bring the Start button (and menu) back to Windows 8, from excellent ones like
Stardock's Start8,
to ones that add value like Pokki.
But you don't need to pay to get a Start button: There's one tool that's free,
open-source, and very customizable. Meet Classic Shell.
Unlike most Start menu replacements, Classic Shell has been around for a while. Its first version came out in November 2009, long before Windows 8 was even close to public. At the time, it was meant to fix interface annoyances in Windows Vista. That was version 0.9 (the first publicly available version), and today, more than three years later, it's at version 3.6.4. As software projects are wont to do, Classic Shell grew over time, and now consists of three separate parts: Classic Explorer, Classic Start Menu, and Classic IE9.
That tendency of software projects to grow and morph over time is exactly what Classic Shell sets out to fix. It doesn't try to invent anything new: In the project's own words, Classic Shell is "a collection of features that were available in older versions of Windows but were later removed." You're not going to find any groundbreaking UI innovations here, and in my eyes, that's a good thing. These are interface patterns that worked and that Microsoft took away for reasons unknown.
Unlike most Start menu replacements, Classic Shell has been around for a while. Its first version came out in November 2009, long before Windows 8 was even close to public. At the time, it was meant to fix interface annoyances in Windows Vista. That was version 0.9 (the first publicly available version), and today, more than three years later, it's at version 3.6.4. As software projects are wont to do, Classic Shell grew over time, and now consists of three separate parts: Classic Explorer, Classic Start Menu, and Classic IE9.
That tendency of software projects to grow and morph over time is exactly what Classic Shell sets out to fix. It doesn't try to invent anything new: In the project's own words, Classic Shell is "a collection of features that were available in older versions of Windows but were later removed." You're not going to find any groundbreaking UI innovations here, and in my eyes, that's a good thing. These are interface patterns that worked and that Microsoft took away for reasons unknown.
Classic
Shell ships with three built-in skins derived from different Windows versions,
which can be tweaked as needed.
Classic Shell's most newsworthy component is
Classic Start Menu, and it's stellar. Hit the Windows key on your keyboard, and
up pops a Start menu, just like you remember it from Windows 7 (or Windows
Vista, or Windows XP–you can choose your own skin). Start typing to search for
programs, hit Enter to launch. Search is blazing fast. You can pin items to the
Start menu, and customize every aspect of it. Never use the Printers item? No
problem, you can easily make it go away. In other words, Classic Start Menu is
just like the Start Menu you know and love, only more customizable.
Classic IE9 and Classic Explorer aren't as exciting to me, perhaps because I use Google Chrome as my browser and my files are not stored locally on my computers they are on my network shares and file server. Still, if you do use Internet Explorer 9 or 10, Classic IE9 improves its interface by including the current website's title in the window title bar, showing the current security zone in the status bar, and showing the loading progress in the status bar.
Classic IE9 and Classic Explorer aren't as exciting to me, perhaps because I use Google Chrome as my browser and my files are not stored locally on my computers they are on my network shares and file server. Still, if you do use Internet Explorer 9 or 10, Classic IE9 improves its interface by including the current website's title in the window title bar, showing the current security zone in the status bar, and showing the loading progress in the status bar.
Classic
Explorer is an optional component of Classic Shell that fixes a few of the
newfangled changes made in Windows Explorer.
Classic Explorer fixes Windows Explorer annoyances by adding a toolbar
with common operations (copy/paste, go to parent folder, etc.), showing the
free disk space and the total size of the selected files in the status bar,
disabling breadcrumbs on the address bar, and more. Much like Classic Start
Menu, it is very customizable, so you don't have to use all of its features
(for example, I quite like the breadcrumbs, those clickable elements in the
address bar that let you go back up the folder hierarchy, and Classic Explorer
let me keep them).
Before
you spend any money on a Start Menu replacement for Windows 8, you absolutely
must check out Classic Shell. Its lean and customizable menu gets the job done
with no fuss, and gives you the exact Start Menu you've always wanted, no
matter which version of Windows it comes from.
Note: The Download button on the Product
Information page will download the software to your system. This file is
donationware; the developer offers it for free, but encourages donations toward
its development.
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